I am always looking for indications and metaphors for the changes we are experiencing within publishing. Among the questions I focus on: Why are we moving from a print model to a digital model? What is the value of the information that publishing companies produce? What is the role of publishing within each industry? What… Continue reading As Goes the Music Industry, So Goes the World
Cliffs Notes to the State of the News Media 2007 Report
Mark Glaser has a great recap of reactions to the recently released State of the News Media 2007 report. I refuse to do a recap of a recap, so you will have to check it out yourself.
Yawn. The Death of Newspapers.
Have you heard? Newspapers are dead? While that is fun for some people to say, I still get the sense that it is the same old tug-of-war between the “old guard” and the “new guard.” More likely, people simply haven’t come up with a better way to refer how we get news. Tim O’Reilly started… Continue reading Yawn. The Death of Newspapers.
Getting Link Love From Others on the Web
Rand Fishkin shares some tips on “Creating Content that Appeals to a Link-Savvy Audience.” While much of B2B content needs to exist specifically for core users, it can be great marketing to post the occasional article that has a broader audience appeal. Among Rand’s suggestion are to focus on topics that are “unique, interesting and… Continue reading Getting Link Love From Others on the Web
Making Money Online May Be Harder Than Previously Believed
A few interesting articles discuss how to monetize the web. The New York Times states that “Popularity Might Not Be Enough.” A recent report indicates that if you want to build an ad-supported online media business, that is supported by a staff that creates original content, the numbers simply don’t work out. You would need… Continue reading Making Money Online May Be Harder Than Previously Believed
Time Magazine to Focus Less on News, More on Voice
The Wall Street Journal reports on the redesigned Time magazine: “In addition to a new look, editors have invoked the Economist as a role model for the new Time — less of a news digest, more of an opinion journal… Future issues will provide lots of directional signals to the magazine’s online edition, editors promise.”
Now Hiring: Citizen Journalists
Traditional journalism outlets are embracing citizen journalism: “CBS News and Fox News on Monday signed up Neighborhood America to create social-networking technology that will help them attract user-generated news reports from citizen journalists around the United States.” At what point will every niche, every industry, every B2B category have well established networks of “sources” that… Continue reading Now Hiring: Citizen Journalists
Magazine Publishers See Their Future
The International Herald Tribune reports on an international magazine conference, the Magazine Media 2.0 conference. Some interesting quotes: “For most publishers at the conference, the Internet remains a greedy one-way vacuum, siphoning readers and advertising into an uncertain future.” “I think the old ways of buying media are old-fashioned and won’t be followed in the… Continue reading Magazine Publishers See Their Future
Connecting the Islands of Information
Read/Write Web looks at the coming transformation of the web as bits of individualized pieces of information, to a the web becoming a system of “web services that integrate this information in more useful ways. “Some web sites will follow the example of Amazon, del.icio.us and Flickr and will offer their information via a REST… Continue reading Connecting the Islands of Information
Only Paying When You Receive: Google’s Pay-Per-Action
Google is testing a new ad system, called pay-per-action. Unlike their currend AdWords system, in which advertisers pay for each time a user clicks on their ad, pay-per-action is described this way: “Pay-per-action advertising is a new pricing model that allows you to pay only for completed actions that you define, such as a lead,… Continue reading Only Paying When You Receive: Google’s Pay-Per-Action
